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Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment

BACKGROUND: Anomalous biliary opening especially the presence of the ampulla of Vater in the duodenal bulb is a very rare phenomenon. We report clinical implications, laboratory and ERCP findings and also therapeutic approaches in 53 cases. METHODS: The data were collected from the records of 12.158...

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Autores principales: Disibeyaz, Selcuk, Parlak, Erkan, Cicek, Bahattin, Cengiz, Cem, Kuran, Sedef O, Oguz, Dilek, Güzel, Hakan, Sahin, Burhan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1933541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17610747
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-7-26
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author Disibeyaz, Selcuk
Parlak, Erkan
Cicek, Bahattin
Cengiz, Cem
Kuran, Sedef O
Oguz, Dilek
Güzel, Hakan
Sahin, Burhan
author_facet Disibeyaz, Selcuk
Parlak, Erkan
Cicek, Bahattin
Cengiz, Cem
Kuran, Sedef O
Oguz, Dilek
Güzel, Hakan
Sahin, Burhan
author_sort Disibeyaz, Selcuk
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Anomalous biliary opening especially the presence of the ampulla of Vater in the duodenal bulb is a very rare phenomenon. We report clinical implications, laboratory and ERCP findings and also therapeutic approaches in 53 cases. METHODS: The data were collected from the records of 12.158 ERCP. The diagnosis was established as an anomalous opening of the common bile duct (CBD) into the duodenal bulb when there is an orifice observed in the bulb with the absence of a papillary structure at its normal localization and when the CBD is visualized by cholangiography through this orifice without evidence of any other opening. RESULTS: A total of 53 cases were recruited. There was an obvious male preponderance (M/F: 49/4). Demographic data and ERCP findings were available for all, but clinical characteristics and laboratory findings could be obtained from 39 patients with full records. Thirty – seven of 39 cases had abdominal pain (95%) and 23 of them (59%) had cholangitis as well. Elevated AP and GGT were found in 97.4% (52/53). History of cholecystectomy was present in 64% of the cases, recurrent cholangitis in 26% and duodenal ulcer in 45%. Normal papilla was not observed in any of the patients and a cleft-like opening was evident instead. The CBD was hook shaped at the distal part that opens to the duodenal bulb. Pancreatic duct (PD) was opening separately into the bulb in all the cases when it was possible to visualize. Dilated CBD in ERCP was evident in 94% and the CBD stone was demonstrated in 51%. PD was dilated in four of 12 (33%) cases. None of them has a history of pancreatitis. Endoscopically, Papillary Balloon Dilatation instead of Sphincterotomy carried out in 19 of 27 patients (70%) with choledocholithiazis. Remaining eight patients had undergone surgery (30%). Clinical symptoms were resolved with medical treatment in 16(32%) patients with dilated CBD but no stone. Perforation and bleeding were occurred only in two patients, which stones extracted with sphincterotomy (each complication in 1 patient). CONCLUSION: The opening of the CBD into the duodenal bulb is a rare event that may be associated with biliary and gastric/duodenal diseases. To date, surgical treatment has been preferred. In our experience, sphincterotomy has a high risk since it may lead to bleeding and perforation by virtue of the fact that a true papillary structure is absent. However, we performed balloon dilatation of the orifice successfully without any serious complication and suggest this as a safe therapeutic modality.
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spelling pubmed-19335412007-07-27 Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment Disibeyaz, Selcuk Parlak, Erkan Cicek, Bahattin Cengiz, Cem Kuran, Sedef O Oguz, Dilek Güzel, Hakan Sahin, Burhan BMC Gastroenterol Research Article BACKGROUND: Anomalous biliary opening especially the presence of the ampulla of Vater in the duodenal bulb is a very rare phenomenon. We report clinical implications, laboratory and ERCP findings and also therapeutic approaches in 53 cases. METHODS: The data were collected from the records of 12.158 ERCP. The diagnosis was established as an anomalous opening of the common bile duct (CBD) into the duodenal bulb when there is an orifice observed in the bulb with the absence of a papillary structure at its normal localization and when the CBD is visualized by cholangiography through this orifice without evidence of any other opening. RESULTS: A total of 53 cases were recruited. There was an obvious male preponderance (M/F: 49/4). Demographic data and ERCP findings were available for all, but clinical characteristics and laboratory findings could be obtained from 39 patients with full records. Thirty – seven of 39 cases had abdominal pain (95%) and 23 of them (59%) had cholangitis as well. Elevated AP and GGT were found in 97.4% (52/53). History of cholecystectomy was present in 64% of the cases, recurrent cholangitis in 26% and duodenal ulcer in 45%. Normal papilla was not observed in any of the patients and a cleft-like opening was evident instead. The CBD was hook shaped at the distal part that opens to the duodenal bulb. Pancreatic duct (PD) was opening separately into the bulb in all the cases when it was possible to visualize. Dilated CBD in ERCP was evident in 94% and the CBD stone was demonstrated in 51%. PD was dilated in four of 12 (33%) cases. None of them has a history of pancreatitis. Endoscopically, Papillary Balloon Dilatation instead of Sphincterotomy carried out in 19 of 27 patients (70%) with choledocholithiazis. Remaining eight patients had undergone surgery (30%). Clinical symptoms were resolved with medical treatment in 16(32%) patients with dilated CBD but no stone. Perforation and bleeding were occurred only in two patients, which stones extracted with sphincterotomy (each complication in 1 patient). CONCLUSION: The opening of the CBD into the duodenal bulb is a rare event that may be associated with biliary and gastric/duodenal diseases. To date, surgical treatment has been preferred. In our experience, sphincterotomy has a high risk since it may lead to bleeding and perforation by virtue of the fact that a true papillary structure is absent. However, we performed balloon dilatation of the orifice successfully without any serious complication and suggest this as a safe therapeutic modality. BioMed Central 2007-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC1933541/ /pubmed/17610747 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-7-26 Text en Copyright © 2007 Disibeyaz et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Disibeyaz, Selcuk
Parlak, Erkan
Cicek, Bahattin
Cengiz, Cem
Kuran, Sedef O
Oguz, Dilek
Güzel, Hakan
Sahin, Burhan
Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment
title Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment
title_full Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment
title_fullStr Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment
title_full_unstemmed Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment
title_short Anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment
title_sort anomalous opening of the common bile duct into the duodenal bulb: endoscopic treatment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1933541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17610747
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-230X-7-26
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